How Much Shock Do You Need for a 5,000 Gallon Pool?
For a 5,000-gallon pool, shock dose depends on chlorine raise and water quality. Granular shock is sized to raise sanitizer quickly—always verify with testing.
Shock raises free chlorine fast. Use the table below for rough ounces at your volume, then fine-tune with the calculator for your target ppm. Run pump
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Steps
- Test pool volume and current sanitizer level.
- Pick standard (about 10 ppm raise) or double for heavy algae—per label.
- Broadcast shock with pump running; brush and circulate.
- Retest before swimming—target safe free chlorine in range.
What This Means
Shock treatment temporarily raises free chlorine well above daily maintenance so the water can oxidize sweat, oils, algae, and other organic load. For a 5,000-gallon pool, the ounces on this page scale with volume; your starting sanitizer level and how “dirty” the water is still determine whether you need a standard or stronger dose.
Granular shock products vary in strength and required handling—always read the label, pre-dissolve when instructed, and broadcast with the pump running. Afterward, filtration time matters as much as the initial dose: dead algae and debris must be captured by the filter or vacuumed out.
Recommended Levels
- After shock: return to 1–3 ppm free chlorine for swimming Typical
- pH: 7.2–7.6 before/after treatment
- Total alkalinity: 80–120 ppm (typical)
What Happens If Levels Are Off
Under-shocking during an algae bloom or after heavy contamination often wastes time: chlorine may rise briefly but not long enough to oxidize everything, and the pool can slide back to cloudy or green water.
Over-shocking can keep swimmers out for an extended period, stress vinyl or equipment finishes, and mask other problems if you never verify pH, alkalinity, and filtration.
Shocking without circulation or with a clogged filter leaves dead organics suspended—water can look worse before it looks better. Clean baskets, watch filter pressure, and run the pump as recommended during recovery.
Quick tips
- Shock in the evening when practical—less immediate UV loss than midday, and you can run the pump overnight.
- Brush walls and floor after dosing to expose algae to treated water.
- Backwash or clean the filter when pressure rises; a loaded filter slows recovery.
- Retest before swimming; follow label wait times and local health guidance.
- Do not mix different shock types or add through the skimmer unless the label allows it.
- Pair shock with good pH—extreme pH reduces how effective the sanitizer is during the treatment window.
Illustrative scale: about 0.75 units of shock product per 10,000 gallons (example). Real dosing depends on current chlorine and water quality.
Shock dosage reference
Standard shock raises chlorine by about 10 ppm. Use double for heavy contamination. Always verify with testing.
| Level | Granular shock (oz) | Granular shock (lb) |
|---|---|---|
| Standard (10 ppm) | 5.0 oz | 0.31 lb |
| Double (20 ppm) | 10.0 oz | 0.63 lb |
Common Questions
How much shock for a 5,000 gallon pool?
It depends on current water condition and target chlorine raise. Use the table on this page or the Pool Shock Calculator for exact ounces.
How much shock per 1,000 gallons?
Scale the per-pool estimates by volume—your calculator is the safest way to avoid overdosing.
Can you add too much shock?
Yes—very high chlorine can delay swimming and irritate skin. Always test and follow label safety.
How long after shocking can you swim?
Wait until free chlorine returns to a safe range per label and local guidance—often when water is clear and tests read normal.
Is liquid or granular shock better?
This page focuses on granular ounces; liquid products differ. Use the calculator and match product type to your situation.
- Typical range: 1–3 ppm chlorine
- Recommended pH: 7.2–7.6
- Test water regularly
WaterBalanceTools provides practical calculators and guides for pool and hot tub water chemistry. These tools are designed to help maintain safe chlorine, pH, and total alkalinity within a healthy water balance.
Last updated: April 2026